Yesterday marked 100 days since Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop took office, and Fulop’s first three months as mayor have been marked by a considerable lack of opposition, some bold initiatives that have sparked national interest and, yes, at least one broken campaign pledge.

Asked to name his biggest accomplishment, Fulop, speaking to The Jersey Journal inside his office last week, couldn’t stop at one, naming the city’s paid sick leave mandate, the planned dissolution of the Parking Authority, the merger of the Fire and Police departments and the creation of a new tax abatement policy.

“I think we hit the ground running,” said Fulop, 36.

It’s no surprise Fulop has been able to secure passage of his entire legislative agenda so far: seven of the nine City Council members ran on his ticket, and the other two have been generally supportive as well. But it’s an awful lot of change in just over three months.

“We’ve been very aggressive,” he said. “We’re doing more at a faster pace than most administrations in the state. I think we can continue.”

One thing Fulop isn’t going to do is impose term limits on himself and the council. He pledged during the campaign that he would, but this week he told The Star-Ledger that while he supports term limits in theory, he can’t legally require them.

There have been glitches. A measure Fulop backed to revamp city government stalled when his own allies voted it down without notifying him in advance (they ended up approving it two weeks later). And the mayor took office during a particularly bloody time, with 10 homicides since July 1, three fewer than in all of 2012.

Fulop said he thinks the city has “turned a corner” on the violence, and he credits his new public safety team, Public Safety Director James Shea and Police Chief Robert Cowan among them, with the change.

The paid sick time measure — adopted unanimously by the council, it requires most private businesses in the city to give their workers paid leave — won accolades from unions and liberal groups, and for political observers who think Fulop has eyes on the governor’s mansion, it only added grist to the rumor mill.

Ward D Councilman Michael Yun, one of the two council members who ran opposed to Fulop’s slate, said he’d give Fulop an A, but “not an A-plus,” for his first 100 days.

“He has a new vision and a new plan to try to implement in the city,” Yun said. “I give him lots of credit for that. It’s about time we tried some new things.”